So, everyone is freaking out after researchers revealed at the American Chemical Society meeting in Denver earlier this week that it's possible to convert the digestible starch to indigestible by changing the cooking process in two ways. First, add a teaspoon of coconut oil into boiling water before adding a half cup of rice, then, after it's cooked, chill the rice for 12 hours before serving.

Really, that's all there is to it? It sounds too good to be true, so we asked food scientist and spokesperson of the Institute of Food Technologists, Kantha Shelke, Ph.D., to explain it to us. Get ready for some big words.

"The addition of a small amount of coconut oil (rich in medium-chain triglycerides) increases the retrogradation or crystallization of starch," Dr. Shelke told SheKnows. "The triglyceride gets entrapped inside the amylose helix and makes the amylose crystallites resistant to digestion. This reduction in the digestion of starch is appreciable when the rice is refrigerated."

Translation, this really works. But, and this is a big but, you cannot then reheat the rice for your meal and expect everything to stay the same.

"The resistance to digestion, and therefore the associated decline in caloric contribution, is largely valid for chilled rice," added Dr. Shelke. "Heating the rice — as rice dishes are normally consumed in hot dishes — can melt the crystals and make them less resistant to digestion."

So, it's not exactly false, but it's not exactly the best way to eat rice. Or, look at it this way: You'll just have to eat a whole lot more sushi. That doesn't sound like a bad solution, actually.